Technically, no. The Ohio River forms the southern border of Indiana with Kentucky. Kentucky has jurisdiction of most of the Ohio River. The state line is at the low-water mark of the northern shore in 1792. This means that the Indiana state line only goes about 10% of the way across the Ohio River. So technically, the Ohio River flows SOUTH of Indiana, or along Indiana's southern border.
Yes.
No.
The three rivers that run through Pittsburgh, PA are:Allegheny RiverOhio RiverMonongahela RiverThe Allegheny River and the Monongahela River meet at Pittsburgh to form the Ohio River.
The river that is formed where the Allegheny and Monongahela meet is the Ohio
No. Not directly. It flows into the into the Mississippi river. At the Mississippi it is actually larger.
Yes, the Cuyahoga River runs north. It begins outside of Ravenna, Ohio, and snakes through Northeast Ohio, and empties into Lake Erie in Cleveland, Ohio.
River de Panoteras.
The Ohio River
I deleted the previous answer which said "the Ohio River." While the Ohio River serves as a natural border between southern Ohio and northern West Virginia and Kentucky, it does not run through Ohio and is nowhere near Columbus (located in the middle of the state). The Olentangy and Scioto Rivers run through Columbus, Ohio. The Olentangy runs north to south, through the Ohio State University Campus. Just west of the Olentangy, the Scioto runs nortwest to south through downtown Columbus.
Ohio is the closest state to the Ohio River that's why it is called the Ohio River.
There are three river systems that run through the state of Virginia. They are the Mississippi River, the Tennessee River and the Ohio River.
The Minnesota River runs into the Mississippi. So do the Missouri, Illinois, and Ohio Rivers.
No, the Ohio River runs through Louisville and joins the Mississippi River in Cairo, Ill.